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Pictures from Scallop Leg 2

/files/marine/files/img_0773.jpg : Tied up in Lewes, DE

/files/marine/files/img_0777.jpg : Leaving Lewes Harbor

/files/marine/files/img_0783.jpg : We steamed north past Cape May, NJ

/files/marine/files/img_0799.jpg : I spent much of this leg operating the multibeam snoar, that reveals a map of the elevation of the ocean floor 

/files/marine/files/img_0809.jpg : We steamed past Block Island and its new wind farm

/files/marine/files/img_0812.jpg : The storm we navigated through

/files/marine/files/img_0816.jpg : Scallops!

/files/marine/files/img_0819.jpg : In some dredges we caught hundreds of scallops

/files/marine/files/img_0821.jpg : In others we caught boulders

/files/marine/files/img_0825.jpg : Massimo, one of the scientists, myself, and Jonathan, the engineers, collected sediment with the grab sampler

/files/marine/files/IMG_0829.JPG : Who needs a whale watch?

/files/marine/files/IMG_0835.JPG : Sunset at sea

/files/marine/files/IMG_0841.JPG : Welcome to Woods Hole, MA!

/files/marine/files/IMG_0842.JPG : The R/V Armstrong, the research vessel for Wood’s Hole Oceanographic Institute

/files/marine/files/IMG_0846.JPG : The Sharp tied up in Woods Hole

 

Week three is a Little late

Now that the third week has come to a close and one half of my time aboard the R/V Atlantis is just about over I can really get a sense of what life is like working on a research vessel.  First off any standers of a normal workday are gone.  As one of my fellow Alvin workers said it best “everyday is like a Monday.”  We wake up early every morning barely coherent, look for that pot of coffee and go through the same routine.  With no weekends off and always have work to do you would think that this would make this life style unbearable but it is just the opposite.  For everyone out here the benefits out way the cost.  The biggest problem we’ll face is not the when the sub decides to misbehave but it is time.  When you’re working with a piece of equipment that is designed to withstand more then 400 times the pressure of earths atmosphere.  Along with having to have the sub ready every morning promptly at 7:30 so the science team can go down and collect the samples they need, time is not really on your side.  Though we have been very fortunate this cruse that there have been no major issues with Alvin, even something as simple as an unwanted ground in the electrical system can set us back.  When working in this type of environment the biggest key to success is work cohesion.  Being able to get along with your coworkers is so important in this filed because you have to spend so much time together under high stress situations.  As an intern the first thing I learned was to know when it was time to get in and help out and then when to get out of the way. 

 

We have had 16 consecutive dives now with 21 total dives schedule for the science cruse.  Keeping track of day-to-day events has been getting harder because everyday is the same thing and at this point it all starts to mix together.  One day can feel like a lifetime but one week can feel like a day.  Despite this I am still enjoying my time out here, I love the work and I’m enjoying the people.  We are all quite literally stuck in the same boat.  As the science cruse is coming to an end we are expected to be arriving into port either the 10th or the 11th.  Once then we will say our goodbyes and head back out for the engineering segment.  There are only 4 dives planed for the engineering cruse, were we will be diving to the subs current maximum depth of 4500 meters (14,763 feet).  For a better example most naval subs cat go below a 1,000 feet (304 meters).  At the depth of 4500 meters you will be experiencing 450 atmospheres worth of pressure.  With experiencing 14.7 PSI (pounds per square inch) in one atmosphere, Alvin will be experiencing 6,615 PSI at 450 atmospheres.  Once the engineering dives are over I will be staying on the ship for the 2-week cruse back to Woods Hole Massachusetts.  I am not quite sure what jobs they will be having me do during the transit but I know I will be put to work.

 

Now on to the more interesting topic of what did I do this week?  I am getting this blog out a little late again do to a network failure on Sunday and a series of unfortunate events on my behalf Monday night.  The week started out just like any other.  On Tuesday we had to take the battery that I have been working on out in order to begin cleaning of the battery hold for ship inspection.  The cleaning didn’t start till Thursday and lasted over into Friday.  Thursday was game night on the ship so a bunch of us got together and played some card games.  On Friday we had gotten to a new dive cite and this one was only around 400 meters deep witch is very shallow for this sub.  Strangely this became problematic because all the connectors on the sub are meant to perform at more extreme depths.  We ended up having to deal with a ground in a cable witch was caused by a small amount of water making its way into the connector.  We thought we fixed the problem the night before but the ground returned the fallowing morning and we had to postpone the dive till 11.  These problems continued and on Sunday the sub had to surface half way through the dive because we got a ground in the hydraulic motor connection. This completely prevented any used of the mechanical arms on the sub so the dive could not be completed.  We were able to quickly fix the problem and get the sub back into the water only 30 minutes later.  Sunday night we got a massive storm witch prevented any use of the network and with the only free time I have is at night I could not get the blog out then.  On Monday we moved the batteries back into the hold and I got to work prepping them for final assembly. Once returned one of the subs cameras stopped working and we’ve begun working on fixing that.   Monday night we begun transit to a new location and just as I was ready so send my blog post the ship changed heading and blocked the satellite dish once again taking down the network.  Tuesday, today I had finished prepping the batteries and we are planning to start assembly tomorrow.  That just about sums up what I did for the last week.

 

I also want to say I was suppose to have some images in the last blog posting but didn’t due to a complication wile up loading so I’m going to try again tonight.  If I cant get it to work I will post the images separately in an few days once we get back to port. 

Beautiful Deep Sea Discoveries- Photos Galor, A MUST Read!

          

The back of our computer control panel       Can you spy Wilma? She made it and was set free!

-or as I like to think- my wire castle.

PC: Jason Bradley

                    

Brittle Star                                 Sea Cucumber- ventral view                 Glass Sponge

      

  Stone Coral                               Translucent Sea Cucumber                     Flat Worm

 

 

                

   Stalk Anenome                       Translucent  Sea Cucumber                Squat Lobster

Week Three on R/V Sharp

This week was quite interesting, where I got a chance to see many different operations and learn a lot from KG, the senior tech onboard. The theme of this week was encountering a steady stream of small problems, as opposed to several larger issues onboard the previous leg.

Last Saturday, a very nice day, the scientists continued to tow the habcam near Long Island, close enough at one point that we could make out houses on the beach, so most of the crew headed up to the bridge holding their phones in the air trying to get service. We started the multibeam up again, but had issues with the computer freezing, so we opened up the unit and reset a chip which seemed to solve the problem. After a crash course from KG, I was operating the multibeam sonar on my own, adjusting settings as the bottom changed and sending profiles of the bottom to the scientists. I also installed a new camera on the stack pointing towards the dredging area, where I learned how to terminate the cable and secure connection points with splicing tape.

Sunday came with more multibeam and more freezing issues, so we took some screenshots of the issues and KG sent them to an expert on shore. I was assigned the task of writing up a procedure pertaining how to start up and operate the multibeam to help out future techs and interns on the boat. When I did my daily check of the SMS system, I noticed that the temperature and humidity were way off. We went aloft and opened up the sensor, which had water inside, so we replaced it with a spare that we had onboard. KG stressed the importance of always having spare parts while at sea. Monday started with me being awakened by the crash of pots and pans in the galley; another rough day at sea. We were on the high seas, 50 miles off Nantucket, getting prepped to start the first multibeam survey of the canyons for suitable juvenile lobster habitat. It was very difficult to watch a computer with all of that rolling, so I terminated more ethernet cables and worked with KG to learn the model numbers and names of CTD sensors.

The multibeam was having issues finding the bottom due to the contant pitching of the ship, and on Tuesday we eventually pulled out the habcam, which had a ripped open termination and a point in the fiber optic cable where some of the strands had come unlaid. We cut the cable past that point so the scientists could work on a new termination, a long process that could take more than a day. So instead we headed to the first dredging site, where the science wanted to run a CTD cast to obtain water quality data at depth. KG showed me the process and walked me through the entire thing, from setting the device up, dropping it in, recovering water samples, and recovering it with the winch. Once this was complete, we began dredging, going through the motions of launching and recovering the large, rusty dredge, then jumping on the table and shoveling our catch to the scientists who sorted out the organisms they wanted. Up here, our catch was much different than the southern leg, with much less sand, more mud, and WAY more scallops, as well as flounder and mean looking goosefish. Between dredges, KG, myself, and Jonathan, one of the engineers, shucked scallops for the cook. It was worth it, because the next few days we enjoyed great meals like bacon wrapped scallops and scallop ceviche.

Wednesday was foggy but much flatter, and we came out on deck to find a winch we need for dredging leaking hydraulic fluid. All we could do was wrap it until we got to port and hope it doesn’t get worse! We did a few more CTD casts between dredges, and KG let me operate the computer controlling the CTD. He also showed me how he processes the data, and let me explore the program that cleans up the data and produces nice looking graphs. Dredging became more tedious as we mostly recovered rocks, some quite large, that we had to pick up or roll off the table. During one of the haulbacks, there was a break in communication and I left a line tied down that ended up snapping off a cleat. It was not a critical piece, though, but it’s always important to know what is happening on deck! On the last dredge of my watch, I talked to Sean, the relief captain, up in the wheelhouse, who showed me how he maneuvers the boat during a tow. It was a long day, but I learned from a lot of different people!

Thursday, another foggy day with a little more roll, began with a few dredges, then it was time to steam to the grab sample site. Once there, we lowered the keel and turned on the ADCP to monitor currents at the stations. KG, Jonathan, and I worked to get the metal grab sampler in the water and winch it down. Due to the roll of the boat and a wire that was not marked with any sort of depths, it was hard to tell when we had hit bottom. After many hours, we only had one sample, and had to move on to another multibeam survey and more dredging. Luckily, during the second survey, the multibeam worked great under my control and science was very happy. Another problem soon struck, when the winch computer was no longer reading tension as we were launching a dredge, and later the CTD winch left the device hanging halfway down to the bottom for nearly an hour. KG and I went down to the engine room to reset the computer, but it wasn’t quite done causing problems.

Today the habcam was back in the water, and it was a nice, sunny, calm day. We were doing habcam tows off Cape Cod and working our way back south to Nantucket. I was monitoring the multibeam with no major issues, until there was commotion in the lab due to a winch tension spike, everyone thinking we had struck bottom hard with the habcam. To pass the time, KG had me work on a spreadsheet that gave information about max depths of various sensors. However, we pulled it up to reveal no damage, and it was likely another fault in the winch computer. We recalibrated the computer and dropped the habcam back in, but KG stressed to Sean and the engineers that this is an issue that needs to be looked out by a professional at electrical equipment. Later, KG gave me a brief introduction to the different types of serial and VGA connections and how computers “talk” to each other. By Sunday afternoon we will be tied up in Wood’s Hole, MA where I will post more pictures. Until then!

 

Huxley

 

Deep Water Horizon, Shipwrecks and ROVS

After completing our event in Baton Rouge we made our way to Morgan City, where we met several workers at the Oceaneering facility. For many years, Oceaneering has centered its ROV work in the Gulf of Mexico, laying pipelines for oil rigs. However, due to a dying industry, they have shifted their energy towards research endeavors. We will be working alongside oceaneering workers, scientists and LUMCON’s director- no pressure! The Mississippi Canyon is a region located wtihn the Gulf of Mexico-where the Deep Water Horizon tragedy occurred only several years ago. The mission of our ROV cruise is focused on deep-sea biodiversity. We will explore many sites, including the Deep Water Horizon region and several other shipwrecks. In addition to ROV footage and collection, our scientists onboard will be conducting several “woodfall” stations using a basket rigged to our side winch (see top description).

Our first day in transit set the tone for the rest of our cruise- full of problems and excitement! We spent a majority of the first day refueling and rewatering, while also fixing and ordering a port navigation light that went out during the night. During our cruise, we deployed both the ROV and a steel basket filled with logs off our side winch. However, the memo that we would be using a basket did not make it up the chain of command, and many crew members found themselves dumbfounded and flustered by the event. Because Oceaneering made our floating tether for our basket too long, we spent a majority of our trip retooling a method for disconnecting and reconnecting the basket at the bottom. The idea is to deploy the basket and ROV to the bottom with transducers on the basket, ROV and site mooring. The mooring will be dropped at our log location and the ROV then must open the basket with a robotic arm and insert logs into the sediment for later recovery. The mooring will stay down below for later return.

In short, the basket caused much more trouble before it became better. Deploying both a basket and ROV off our boat- which is not a DP vessel- is very dangerous as wires can become tangled in our wheels. Because of this, the Captain held position manually our whole trip. After a few days of refitting, and very very long nights, we found several issues wrong with our side winch. Our side winch has not been used this deep (2000m+) in a very long time. While deploying our basket, our chief engineer found several kinks at 1800m of line. We had to immediately pull and address the winch issue, which could not be fixed. Luckily, we reterminated our basket wire and fitted it to our other side winch- which worked swimmingly! Posted below is a photo of the infamous basket! Which I may add a small ancetdote- we found a lizard in there! The lizard must have came from LUMCON and got stuck in a log pile. She (which we originally thought was a he, before she laid an egg) swam all the way back to the boat when the basket was deployed. I took care of “Wilma” for several days and she made it back to LUMCON safely! I will post a photo in my later blog, when the cruise ends!

 

PC: Jason Bradley- an extremely talented photographer who accompanied us during our cruise! He has many more pictures coming- so stay tuned for more 🙂

In addtion to our basket and winch, I learned so much during this fun- yet extremely stressful cruise! For starters, I learned about transponders- an acoustic location system which uses pings and beeps to locate objects for later deployment. As stated, we used these devices on our ROV, basket and moorings and tracked them on a program called Tracklink 5000. It is very important to know where our equipment is while on the vessel- to ascertain nothing is under the boat or tangled (which almost happened a few times). Perhaps my favorite part of the cruise was all the amazing ROV technology! It is incredible that we can set an instrument under water and see what is happening in real time- and do scientific sampling and work! I learned how to tagline, deploy, recover and “fly” an ROV. All very dangerous- yet exciting. Posted below is a photo of my flying for the first time! The cruise is not yet over, but I am so extremely grateful for this experience, the science party and the crew I’ve grown to love with all my heart.

 

PC: James Aldridg from Oceaneering

 

And the rest! (more to come) All from Jason Bradley!

A deep sea isopod we collected!

Dreaming of beer and hamburgers.

 

STAY TUNED!

Its week two on board the Atlantis

It’s Week Two. Yes the second week has ended and this one snuck up on me.  We keep to a steady schedule of getting out of bed at five, prepping the sub and trying to get it out on deck around seven fifteen, and in the water by eight. This means we all need to on our game to get our task done the right way wile being the most efficient. Sadly this means finding time for pictures of the prep, rollout, and launch can get difficult. Now have no fear I have some pictures of all the other work I’ve been doing.

 

            Now I believe I left off on last Tuesday with describing my struggles of finally getting the network figured out. So were on to Wednesday.  Wednesday was s bit of a late start for various reasons we did not get into the water till eleven o’clock. The camera crew that I had briefly mention before had bee for a show on Vice. Now I never caught what the show was called and any other information for that matter. It was very strait forward, here is the sub, here is how it works, and then they got to go down for a ride and look around. Do to the work I was doing at the time I didn’t really see them too much.  The Vice crew had there own vessel that they would return to at the end of the day and by Thursday they were gone.  

 

            Thursday, well Thursday is the day when the weather changed from sunshine and smooth waters to rain, rain, and more rain.  It really wasn’t that bad because the storms didn’t last long enough to produce large waves.  I started a new side project were I had to rebilled the thermal couples on the sub’s ICLs (inductively coupled link).  An ICL interface allows for a non-contact serial communication with an instrument via a pulsed AC magnetic filed.  This allows the sub to use different interchangeable tools on one arm and not have to worry about wires. 

 

            Friday was a little more interesting. The sub went into the water at its normal time and I continued work on the thermal couples. In all it went according to plain until it was time to pule the sub out of the water.  We had a visitor land on the walkway we use to get people in and out of the sub wile it was on deck.  At the time we didn’t think anything of it, birds land on the ship all the time so it was nothing new.  So after a wile we are finally bringing the sub in and this bird had not left yet.  Well we tried everything short of pushing the bird off the walkway and it still wouldn’t leave. Lone behold it wasn’t until we got everyone out of the sub when this bird decided stop standing in the middle of the walkway and flew off.

 

            Saturday was a great contrast to Friday because it didn’t stop raining.  It was raining when we put the sub in and was raining wile we took it out. There were no problems with the sub and spent most of my work time that day soaked to the bone.  The one thing that was interesting was the thunderstorms that night. Lightning rarely touches down out at sea so most of what we were seeing would branch across from one end of the sky to the other.

 

            Lastly it is today, Sunday.  The day started off like all the others, wakening up at five and getting the sub into the water. The weather finally started to clear up and the day was going well. Then around One

O-clock a pod of dolphins came by the ship. There had to be at least one hundred of them.  They were chasing down a school of fish and just so happened to pass by the ship. It had happen so fast that it was over before most of the crew new what was happening.  When it came time to bring the sub up it had begun to rain again and once it was on deck we got it into the hanger as quick as possible and unloaded the passengers from there.  In all the day went really well, other then getting bogged down with work for the sub tonight I have been in a pretty regular schedule the last two weeks.

 

            I am going to try to leave more photos this time and I noticed that my last photo didn’t scale properly for my posting.  I don’t know it if the case for everyone but if it continues to happen you can view the photo by right clicking and going to view image.  I am trying to figure it out.

Week 2 on R/V Sharp

Hello again from the R/V Sharp! It has been quite a crazy week on board. Last Saturday was quite rough, and many of the scientists were out of commision with sea sickness as the habcam was towed once more. Showering was quite an ordeal! I had to take a pill when I felt it coming on…but luckily soon afterwards I was fine. I learned how to terminate, or put the end plugs on, ethernet cables that we might need when we figure out what is wrong with that internet. After a little trial and error, we got our terminations to work! Dinner was amazing, where Paul, the cook, prepared seafood alfredo featuring the some of the scallops we caught yesterday. Sunday was another gorgeous day weatherwise with the seas lessening, as we reached the northern Jersey shore with the cam. The water began to change color from slightly translucent blue to the more opaque sea green I am used to. The scientists showed me a habcam image of a dolphin, which they happened to get a very clear shot of.

Monday was calm but rainy, so we spent the day inside fixing code for the winch plot graphs, which were not reading tension porperly. These are important because we need to know how much strain the habcam is putting on our deck winch. It took a while, as Christian and I are both relatively new at coding, but we talked out and worked thorugh the problem together until the front office was happy. Tuesday we got a task via e mail from KG, the senior tech who was not on board, to design a flowchart for the internet system so we can more quickly find the problem when we get back to port. It was a long day of tracing wires throughout the entire ship, and even then we did not have a complete chart! As we were working on the bridge, we got a chance to talk to Jimmy, the captain, who was very nice.  He told me to stop by his office some time so he could give me a crew shirt, affirming that I was a true crew member.

Wednesday we went back to port in Lewes, Delaware a little early to avoid an oncoming storm. The cruise was a success, with scientists processing over 3 million images that will be used to estimate scallop populations. I helped tie up the boat, then worked with Christian to turn off the flow through system. KG and Tim Deering came on board and we all worked on the internet, adding to the flowchart. When we all ran out of ideas, it was time to call the IT company on shore that we work with. I had the rest of the day off, and felt quite landsick once I left the boat as I was not used to standing on solid ground. Yes that is a thing! Christian invited me over to his place for dinner, where we talked about his previous experices as a science volunteer on other research ships and what working on the Sharp was actually like.

Thursday it was raining once again, as all hands were on board to get set for the second leg. I helped the crew load a sediment grabber, and worked with Drew to drill into metal plates that will be used to better anchor the CTD. KG, who will be working with me on the next leg, showed me a little about how the multibeam scanner worked. We will need it to get an accurate profile of the bottom on portions of this leg. Pam, the cook for this leg, arrived, causing me to have to vacate the room I had been sharing with Paul and move down with a scientist. I spent the last few hours working with Pam and Joe, one of the shoreside workers, to load food and distribute clean linens.

Finally, Fiday morning we casted off again to begin the second leg, heading north along the shelf towards Massachusetts. Once I helped with lines again, I worked with KG and Drew to start the flowthough system, lower the keel and start the various systems for data logging like the SMS. 
After a while of steaming, during which time I worked on a spreadsheet describing all the sensors we own, taking pictures of them, and linking them all to their digital manuals. The CTD is much more complex than I thought! In the evening we deployed the habcam again, and after that time it was my day on the rotation to clean the boat and empty trash. I then was told to see Sean, the Chief Mate, who told me I have to move rooms again tonight because all of science wants to be dowwnstairs together. Since our job is to keep them happy, I told him that I would move to a pullout sofa in the conference room. I felt that I had to be willing to be flexible. At least now I have control of the ice cream freezer! I am looking forward to this next week, an learning much from KG who is an incredibly knowledgeable marine technician.

 

Until then,

Huxley

Pictures from Scallop Leg 1

/files/marine/files/IMG_0720.JPG/> : Arriving at the Sharp

/files/marine/files/IMG_0728.JPG : The habcam pre deployment

/files/marine/files/IMG_0726.JPG : The scallop dredge pre deployment

/files/marine/files/IMG_0731.JPG : Leaving Lewes, DE

/files/marine/files/IMG_0735.JPG : First sunset at sea

/files/marine/files/IMG_0736.jpg : Deploying the habcam

/files/marine/files/IMG_0742.jpg : Friends I saw off the bow

/files/marine/files/IMG_0753.JPG : The scallops we caught while dredging

/files/marine/files/IMG_0754.JPG : I got a chance to shuck a bunch of scallops with the scientists

/files/marine/files/IMG_0760.JPG : The bottom that we dredged up

First week with the R/V Atlantis

My adventure started last Tuesday. I had to fly from my parents place in Virginia to Atlanta and then on to Costa Rica.  I was able to meat another member of the Alvin team in Atlanta.  Hue has been working at WHOI for a long time now but has not worked with Alvin to often during his time there.  When we got into San Jose I got to meat Mike, one of the Alvin pilots.  Mike has been doing this for a wile and has had the opportunity to dive on numerous locations. One very notably of which was the Titanic.  There were several people flying in that night so instead of leaving for the port everybody stayed at the local Days Inn.  The fallowing morning we drove two hours to Puntarenas.  Then we took the 12:00 ride over to the Atlantis.  The Atlantis had been out at anchor because the tides and swells were so strong that it would lead to issues wile in port.  Once I was aboard all the introductions began and I got to have a tour of the ship.  Once that was done I got to meat the rest of the Alvin group, Pat, Todd, Josh, Drew, Jason, and Danik.

 

Thursday was workday, the Alvin team had to get the sub completely ready for operations.  For me this meant that I would be working with the ET shop.  I had to be checking the different cameras and making sure everything was set up correctly.   Friday Started out with a weight party.  A weight party is when you wake up and report on deck at 5:00am to setup the weights for all the cruses.  We had to make 82 stacks and each stack had 16 weights.  Each weight ways 16 pounds so there is 256 pounds per stack. In the end we moved 20,992 pounds of steal weights.  The science group came aboard that day and started to setup all of their equipment.  Some of the bigger items we had to go into port to get.   As Saturday came around we left the bay at 9:00 and transited for 10 hours to our dive location.  Once there we got the elevator set up and dropped it for the dive on Sunday.  The elevator is a platform that is sent down with samples attached to it so the sub can place them and recover old samples that were left on pervious dives. Finally Sunday was our first dive day and it went well. I had gotten a run down of jobs I had to complete in order for the sub to get in the water on time. Then when the sub was in the water we prepped for its return and went on to do side projects. I started work on the batteries one of the battery packs had been swapped out and needed work done.  The sub was out of the water by 5:00 and then began the post dive operations.

 

Now I was intending to send out a post that night saying look guys its week one and we just did our first dive. As you can tell it didn’t go according to plan. Internet wasn’t working out to well. There are two more groups that are working on this ship with Alvin. Sentry, which is a UAV (underwater autonomous vehicle) and Wire Flyer, which is a autonomous bot that operates by moving up and down a wire that towed at deep depths.  That doesn’t include the science group that is working with Alvin. Every one of these groups needs to be utilizing the network so it has become very limited.  We have had two more dives sense Sunday, one on Monday and one today. They went off like clockwork with just your typical post dive maintenance.  I have finished my work on the batteries and have moved on to a couple different projects.  Things have been going well and there even was a film crew that came out today.  I didn’t see much of them but apparently they have a dived schedule for tomorrow. 

 

I’m going to try and post every Sunday in order to recap on the week before. I also will post a picture with me in it next time.

Big Wigs and Boat Celebrations in Baton Rouge

Our short cruise is now officially over and we spent the following late evening in transit to Baton Rouge. The trip was much longer as expected as we had several locks and bridges to go through, which never ceases to tickle my excitement! We took on board our chief scientist for our upcoming ROV cruise- along with two other scientists conducting work on micro-plastics. The Mississippi River is a huge sink for most of the United States pollution, and a large amount of that pollution is composed of micro-plastics. During a selected number of stations, along our transit to Baton Rouge, we slowed down periodically to deploy net tows. The net tows are put over the side deck and slowly drifted until sufficient plastic is accumulated. A scientist on board informed me that it’s not a matter of if fish will be filled with plastic, but a matter of how much. The information was saddening to hear, and holds greater weight knowing a very large majority of US fish bought originates in Lousiana and the Mississippi River. We arrived around 7pm to Baton Rouge, set up our gangways for our event tomorrow, demobilized and called it a night. We have a long few days ahead of us- full of legislative talks and public boat tours.

The following day marked the start of our massive ‘Meet the Fleet’ event. Over the next few days, thousands of people swarmed the boat for tours, info sessions and rides. I worked at our environmental monitoring booth today. The system Amanda and I worked on was placed in a spare lab on board, along with several posters, sensors, artifacts and informational pieces. Though the subject is not as interesting- in lieu to our 5 million USD dollar ROV on display (see picture posted below)- the subject is extremely important and I enjoyed educating the public about its place in society. I tried my best to make it fun and relatable to the public. I believe I was able to reach a large audience-which makes me very happy.

 

The next few days went as planned, with a premature cancellation on Sunday, due to poor weather. Unfortunately, the call was made too early and we did not receive our storms until the following day. Evidently, the following day was our most important as all Louisiana legislative would be touring the boat..

Big Wigs in Baton Rouge

Today was our last, and most important, day in Baton Rouge. This afternoon, several members of the state legislative department came aboard our vessel. Shortly after the event ended, we made our way to the state capitol for a ceremony service of LUMCON. The service, and several days of boat touring, was meant to educate the public of the importance of LUMCON, its research, educational outreach and vessels. We are hopeful that this event will help fuel funding for a new vessel, which has been extremely beneficial- physically and economically- to the state of Louisiana and Gulf of Mexico region.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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